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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Hong Kong dollar

Wikipedia

 
The Hong Kong Dollar (ISO 4217: HKD) is the official currency of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR) within the People's Republic of China. Under the Basic Law of Hong Kong and the Sino-British Joint Declaration, Hong Kong retains autonomy with respect to currency issuance.

The Hong Kong dollar has been pegged to the United States dollar since October 17, 1983 at HK$7.80 per U.S. dollar through the Hong_Kong_Monetary_Authority#Currency_Board_System|currency board system. A bank can only issue a Hong Kong dollar if it has the equivalent exchange in U.S. dollars on deposit. The currency board system ensures that Hong Kong's entire monetary base is backed with U.S. dollars at the linked exchange rate. The resources for this backing are kept in Hong Kong's Exchange Fund, which is among the largest official reserves in the world.

While the coins are issued by the SAR Government, Hong Kong banknotes (except the 10-dollar denomination) are issued by one of three banks in Hong Kong under the supervision of the territory's de facto central bank, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority. These banks are the Bank of China (Hong Kong), Standard Chartered Bank and Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation. Each bank has its own design for the paper bank notes, but the size and colors are consistent for each denomination.

Starting in 1997, prior to the establishment of the SAR, coins with Queen Elizabeth II's portrait were gradually withdrawn from circulation, and now most of the notes and coins in circulations feature Hong Kong's Bauhinia blakeana flower or other symbols. Coins with the Queen's portrait are still legal tender, but are phasing out.

After a less-than-successful trial from 1994 to 2002 to move the 10-dollar denomination from the banknote format (issued by the banks) to the coin format (Government-issued), the 10-dollar banknotes are the only denomination issued by the SAR Government and not the banks. 10-dollar bank notes issued by banks are, although rare and phasing out, still circulated.

Even though the HKD is the currency of Hong Kong, it is widely accepted in Macao and Mainland China, as well as some shopping malls in Singapore.




Between 1863 to 1935, Hong Kong used silver dollars as legal tender.

The local unit was pegged to the Pound Sterling|British pound from December 1935 to November 1967 at the rate of HK$16 per pound, and from November 1967 to June 1972 at HK$14.55 per pound.

In July 1972, it was repegged to the U.S. dollar at HK$5.65 per dollar, and in February 1973, it was re-set to HK$5.085 per dollar.

The Hong Kong dollar was allowed to float freely in November 1974 until it was repegged in October 1983.

Coins in circulation http://www.discoverhongkong.com/eng/mustknow/information/mk_info_bank.jhtml
  • 10 cent

  • 20 cent

  • 50 cent

  • $1

  • $2

  • $5

  • $10

Bank-notes in circulation
  • $10

  • $20

  • $50

  • $100

  • $500

  • $1000




  • Dollar

  • Renminbi

  • Table of historical exchange rates

  • Economy of Hong Kong




  • http://www.sinobanknote.com/ SinoBanknote

  • http://www.numismondo.com/pm/hkg/ Hong Kong Banknotes - note: historic bills, not current

AsianCurrencies

Category:Economy of Hong Kong
Category:Hong Kong
Category:National currencies

de:Hongkong-Dollar
ja:香港ドル
zh:港元

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hong Kong dollar".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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